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Title page for ETD etd-04012013-120117

Type of Document

Dissertation

Author

Tesdahl, Eric Anthony

Author's Email Address

tesdahl.eric@gmail.com

URN

etd-04012013-120117

Title

Out of many, one: Participation and collaboration in congregation-based community organizing

Degree

PhD

Department

Community Research and Action

Advisory Committee

Advisor Name

Title

Paul W. Speer

Committee Chair

Douglas D. Perkins

Committee Member

Holly J. McCammon

Committee Member

Paul R. Dokecki

Committee Member

Keywords

participation

inter-organizational networks

community organizing

social movements

Date of Defense

2012-12-10

Availability

unrestricted

Abstract

OUT OF MANY, ONE: PARTICIPATION AND COLLABORATION

IN CONGREGATION-BASED COMMUNITY ORGANIZING

Eric A. Tesdahl

Dissertation under the direction of Paul W. Speer

The practice of congregation-based community organizing combines salient elements from the experience and writings of Saul Alinsky with a strong emphasis on relationship building and individual leadership/skill development. This dissertation examines important elements of congregation-based organizing through three distinct but interrelated research studies. Each of these studies are based upon a single important idea: the vitality and long-term viability of metropolitan-level CBCO federations is of crucial importance to the wider practice of congregation-based organizing. Metropolitan-level CBCO federations serve as the primary arena in which relationship building and collaboration across diverse groups – a crucial element of the practice of CBCO – take place. It is through issue work at the metropolitan level that clergy and lay leaders from historically segregated communities are able to engage in discussions on issues of import, discover sets of common interests, and devise strategies for pursuing those interests. Further, it is within the forum provided by the metropolitan federation that community leaders and clergy learn the skills necessary for collaborating with groups not situated within their immediate neighborhood – skills which are crucially necessary for efforts to conduct campaigns beyond the metropolitan area.

The research questions posed in each of these three studies draw heavily upon prior theory and empirical work in the fields of community organizing and social movement studies. The empirical evaluations of these research questions pair data generated by the daily functioning of congregation-based organizing in several US cities with multi-level regression modeling, exponential random graph modeling, and qualitative data analytic techniques. By integrating theory from the study of social movements and community organizing together with data collected in congregation-based organizing settings, this dissertation sets out to make contributions to knowledge which are of relevance to practitioners and scholars of both community organizing and the broader field of social movements.